Many towns were named with reference to their surrounding landscape. Groves of spruce trees and poplars were prominent throughout the countryside of this region and our founders queried naming the new settlement after such, but were undecided as to which one to choose. ‘Poplar Grove’ was already established in the west so the decision was unanimous...‘Spruce Grove’ was bornSpruce Grove was settled by French and Scottish families in 1891 and originally comprised a general store, livery stables, blacksmith shop, hotel and the Roman Catholic Church. The town's centre was located on the crossroads of Century Road and Baseline (now Highway 16).In 1908 the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway came through Spruce Grove and a train station was build south of Baseline on the north side of the tracks, directly in line with what is now Main Street. This resulted in moving all of the established businesses three quarters of a mile west to the present location of the City of Spruce Grove. With the establishment of the railroad, the community became a busy grain-trading center.Spruce Grove was incorporated as a Village in 1955, a Town in 1971 and celebrated its 10th anniversary as a city in 1996. As Alberta’s 16th city, Spruce Grove is one of Western Canada’s fastest growing communities. With a population of 23,326 in 2009 and still growing.
The Town has a pride in its history which began in 1881 when the first homestead in the area was documented. In 1892 the area was known as Dog Rump Creek until a post office was named for the region and it became Stony Plain. In 1907, Stony Plain's first Sheriff, Israel Umbach, made national headlines when he chained a locomotive to the railway tracks for non-payment of taxes and changed the course of history. In 1908 Stony Plain was officially incorporated as a town. Stony Plain's history is kept alive through its murals program, numerous historic sites, and the Multicultural Heritage Centre.
Today Stony Plain, with a population of 12,363, services a surrounding population of over 60,000 people. What continues to make Stony Plain unique is the fact that the town and its people guarded and retain the historic ties to the railroad, the RCMP, and the agricultural community.
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